Nganguia H, Young Y-N, Layton A T, Lai M-C, Hu W-F
Department of Mathematical Sciences, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, New Jersey, USA and Akili Software & Analytics Consulting, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Mathematical Sciences, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, New Jersey, USA.
Phys Rev E. 2016 May;93(5):053114. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevE.93.053114. Epub 2016 May 23.
Most of the existing numerical and theoretical investigations on the electrohydrodynamics of a viscous drop have focused on the creeping Stokes flow regime, where nonlinear inertia effects are neglected. In this work we study the inertia effects on the electrodeformation of a viscous drop under a DC electric field using a novel second-order immersed interface method. The inertia effects are quantified by the Ohnesorge number Oh, and the electric field is characterized by an electric capillary number Ca_{E}. Below the critical Ca_{E}, small to moderate electric field strength gives rise to steady equilibrium drop shapes. We found that, at a fixed Ca_{E}, inertia effects induce larger deformation for an oblate drop than a prolate drop, consistent with previous results in the literature. Moreover, our simulations results indicate that inertia effects on the equilibrium drop deformation are dictated by the direction of normal electric stress on the drop interface: Larger drop deformation is found when the normal electric stress points outward, and smaller drop deformation is found otherwise. To our knowledge, such inertia effects on the equilibrium drop deformation has not been reported in the literature. Above the critical Ca_{E}, no steady equilibrium drop deformation can be found, and often the drop breaks up into a number of daughter droplets. In particular, our Navier-Stokes simulations show that, for the parameters we use, (1) daughter droplets are larger in the presence of inertia, (2) the drop deformation evolves more rapidly compared to creeping flow, and (3) complex distribution of electric stresses for drops with inertia effects. Our results suggest that normal electric pressure may be a useful tool in predicting drop pinch-off in oblate deformations.
大多数现有的关于粘性液滴电流体动力学的数值和理论研究都集中在蠕动斯托克斯流区域,其中非线性惯性效应被忽略。在这项工作中,我们使用一种新颖的二阶浸入界面方法研究了直流电场下粘性液滴电极化过程中的惯性效应。惯性效应通过奥内佐格数Oh来量化,电场由电毛细数Ca_E来表征。在临界Ca_E以下,小到中等电场强度会产生稳定的平衡液滴形状。我们发现,在固定的Ca_E下,惯性效应导致扁球形液滴比长球形液滴产生更大的变形,这与文献中先前的结果一致。此外,我们的模拟结果表明,惯性对平衡液滴变形的影响取决于液滴界面上法向电应力的方向:当法向电应力向外时,液滴变形较大;否则,液滴变形较小。据我们所知,这种惯性对平衡液滴变形的影响在文献中尚未报道。在临界Ca_E以上,找不到稳定的平衡液滴变形,液滴通常会分裂成许多子液滴。特别是,我们的纳维-斯托克斯模拟表明,对于我们使用的参数,(1)存在惯性时子液滴更大,(2)与蠕动流相比,液滴变形演变更快,(3)有惯性效应的液滴电应力分布复杂。我们的结果表明,法向电压力可能是预测扁球形变形中液滴 pinch-off的有用工具。